A real-time method and system for locating a mobile object or person in a tracking environment. The method includes modulating a first carrier signal with a first packet including a first set of data to obtain a modulated first signal and transmitting the first signal. The first signal contains the first packet and has a first precision and a first range within the environment. The steps of modulating and transmitting are repeated until a modulated second signal is received within a time period after the step of transmitting. The second signal contains a second packet including a second set of data and has a second precision and a second range within the environment. The second signal is demodulated to obtain the second packet. Location is determined within the environment based on the second packet.

Patent
   8514071
Priority
Jul 28 2010
Filed
Jul 28 2010
Issued
Aug 20 2013
Expiry
Mar 31 2032
Extension
612 days
Assg.orig
Entity
Small
11
46
currently ok
1. A real-time method of locating a mobile object or person in a tracking environment in which a plurality of sensors are located, the method comprising:
(a) providing a tracking tag wearable by the person or attachable to the object;
(b) modulating a first carrier signal with a first packet including a first set of data to obtain a modulated first signal;
(c) transmitting from the tag to a sensor nearest the tag the first signal, the first signal containing the first packet and having a first precision and a first range within the environment;
(d) repeating steps (b) and (c) until a modulated second signal is received at the tag from the nearest sensor within a time period after step (c), the second signal containing a second packet including a second set of data and having a second precision and a second range within the environment;
(e) receiving the second signal at the tag within the time period;
(f) demodulating the second signal to obtain the second packet; and
(g) determining location of the tag within the environment based on the second packet of the received demodulated second signal.
21. A real-time system of locating a mobile object or person in a tracking environment, the system comprising:
a plurality of sensors located in the tracking environment; and
a tracking tag wearable by the person or attachable to the object, the tag being programmed to at least perform the steps of:
(a) modulating a first carrier signal with a first packet including a first set of data to obtain a modulated first signal;
(b) transmitting to a sensor nearest the tag the first signal, the first signal containing the first packet and having a first precision and a first range within the environment;
(c) repeating steps (a) and (b) until a modulated second signal is received from the nearest sensor within a time period after step (b), the second signal containing a second packet including a second set of data and having a second precision and a second range within the environment;
(d) receiving the second signal within the time period;
(e) demodulating the second signal to obtain the second packet; and
(f) determining location of the tag within the environment based on the second packet of the received demodulated second signal.
2. The method as claimed in claim 1 wherein at least a portion of the second set of data uniquely identifies the nearest sensor.
3. The method as claimed in claim 1 wherein the first set of data non-uniquely identifies the tag.
4. The method as claimed in claim 1 wherein the first set of data uniquely identifies the tag.
5. The method as claimed in claim 1 wherein the first packet is an IR packet.
6. The method as claimed in claim 1 wherein the second packet is an RF packet.
7. The method as claimed in claim 1 wherein the tracking environment is a clinical environment.
8. The method as claimed in claim 1 further comprising:
storing the at least a portion of the second set of data in the tag to obtain stored data;
modulating a third carrier signal with a third packet including the stored data to obtain a modulated third signal; and
transmitting from the tag to a device other than the nearest sensor the third signal, the third signal having a third precision and a third range within the environment.
9. The method as claimed in claim 1 wherein the tag is a multi-modal tag.
10. The method as claimed in claim 1 wherein the first precision is greater than the second precision and the first range is shorter than the second range.
11. The method as claimed in claim 8 wherein the third packet is an RF packet.
12. The method as claimed in claim 8 wherein the first precision is greater than the third precision and the first range is shorter than the third range.
13. The method as claimed in claim 1 wherein the first and second signals are electromagnetic signals.
14. The method as claimed in claim 13 wherein the first signal is an IR signal and the second signal is an RF signal.
15. The method as claimed in claim 1 wherein the first signal is a line-of-sight signal and the second signal is a non-line-of-sight signal.
16. The method as claimed in claim 8 wherein the first, second and third signals are electromagnetic signals.
17. The method as claimed in claim 16 wherein the first signal is an IR signal and the second and third signals are RF signals.
18. The method as claimed in claim 8 wherein the first signal is a line-of-sight signal and the second and third signals are non-line-of-sight signals.
19. The method as claimed in claim 1 further comprising validating the second packet prior to the step of determining.
20. The method as claimed in claim 1 wherein the tag is battery-operated.
22. The system as claimed in claim 21 wherein at least a portion of the second set of data uniquely identifies the nearest sensor.
23. The system as claimed in claim 21 wherein the first set of data non-uniquely identifies the tag.
24. The system as claimed in claim 21 wherein the first set of data uniquely identifies the tag.
25. The system as claimed in claim 21 wherein the first packet is an IR packet.
26. The system as claimed in claim 21 wherein the second packet is an RF packet.
27. The system as claimed in claim 21 wherein the tracking environment is a clinical environment.
28. The system as claimed in claim 21 wherein the tag is further programmed to at least partially perform the steps of:
storing the at least a portion of the second set of data in the tag to obtain stored data;
modulating a third carrier signal with a third packet including the stored data to obtain a modulated third signal; and
transmitting to a device other than the nearest sensor the third signal, the third signal having a third precision and a third range within the environment.
29. The system as claimed in claim 21 wherein the tag is a multi-modal tag.
30. The system as claimed in claim 21 wherein the first precision is greater than the second precision and the first range is shorter than the second range.
31. The system as claimed in claim 28 wherein the third packet is an RF packet.
32. The system as claimed in claim 28 wherein the first precision is greater than the third precision and the first range is shorter than the third range.
33. The system as claimed in claim 21 wherein the first and second signals are electromagnetic signals.
34. The system as claimed in claim 33 wherein the first signal is an IR signal and the second signal is an RF signal.
35. The system as claimed in claim 21 wherein the first signal is a line-of-sight signal and the second signal is a non-line-of-sight signal.
36. The system as claimed in claim 28 wherein the first, second and third signals are electromagnetic signals.
37. The system as claimed in claim 36 wherein the first signal is an IR signal and the second and third signals are RF signals.
38. The system as claimed in claim 28 wherein the first signal is a line-of-sight signal and the second and third signals are non-line-of-sight signals.
39. The system as claimed in claim 21 wherein the tag is further programmed to at least partially perform the step of validating the second packet prior to the step of determining.
40. The system as claimed in claim 21 wherein the tag is battery-operated.

This application is related to U.S. patent application entitled “Real-time Method and System for Determining and Validating Location of a Relocated Mobile Object or Person in a Tracking Environment” filed on the same day as this application. This application is also related to U.S. patent application entitled “Real-time Method and System for Locating a Mobile Object or Person in a Tracking Environment While Conserving Electrical Energy in a Battery-operated Tracking Tag Associated with the Object or Person” filed on Nov. 23, 2009 and having U.S. Ser. No. 12/623,667.

This invention relates to real-time methods and systems for locating a mobile object or person in a tracking environment and, in particular, to real-time methods and systems for locating a mobile object or person in a tracking environment in which a plurality of sensors are located.

Battery-operated (i.e. active) tracking badges and tags often emit radio-frequency (RF) and other signals such as ultrasonic or infrared (IR) signals. These signals are used to precisely establish the real-time location of mobile assets and people to which the badges and tags are affixed.

Typical fire rates for IR are set at every 3 seconds on badges and 9 seconds for asset tags. RF signals are typically set at every 12 seconds on each type of badge. Firing rates can be preselected. Since some tags feature a motion sensor, the tag will go to “sleep” (fire less often to save on battery life) when there is no movement.

Recent asset tag batteries may last up to three years, depending on their preselected firing rate. Patient/personnel tags have a shorter battery life because they are in use and firing signals more frequently than asset tags, consequently, badge batteries typically last up to 18 months. In any event, however, battery-operated tracking tags have a fixed energy budget.

U.S. patent publication 2008/0218351 discloses an RFID tag conservation method and system for active multi-modal RFID tags, illuminator/tag/reader systems, circuit architecture and operational algorithms for battery power conservation that extends tag battery life from a typical 6 months to >5 years. The system is particularly useful in asset and person tracking/inventory systems where power conservation is critical. The tag is configured with a microprocessor operational instruction set algorithm, modifiable on the fly via RF or IR, to synchronize a periodic tag awaken/sense envelope that overlaps the illuminator trigger pulse cycle and puts the tag into deep power conservation sleep for N periods of illuminator cycles. When the tag sees an illuminator signal with a different ID, or no illuminator signal at all, it transmits that anomaly via RF to a reader. This means the object or person with which the tag is associated has been moved out of the original illuminator field of view, permitting near real-time investigation and tracking.

The following U.S. Pat. Nos. are related to at least one embodiment of the invention: 6,154,139; 6,104,295; 5,027,314; 5,572,195; 5,548,637; 5,119,104; 5,017,7984; 4,906,853; 5,387,993; 5,355,222; 5,276,496; 5,131,019; 5,027,383; 4,868,859; 6,838,992 and 6,462,656.

The following U.S. Pat. Nos. are also related to at least one embodiment of the invention: 4,048,729; 4,392,132; 5,093,786; 5,379,213; 5,724,357; 6,021,119; 6,665,000; 7,277,671; 7,403,111; 7,599,703; 5,883,582; 5,929,777; 5,929,779; 6,069,557; 6,241,364; 7,042,337; 6,577,877; 7,005,965; 7,389,180; 7,746,820; 7,747,261; 6,788,199 and 7,079,009.

There are a number of drawbacks to the tag transmissions of the above-noted prior art relative to the amount of energy required to transmit over infrared carriers, particularly in relation to the much lower amount of energy required to transmit over radio frequency carriers. Systems in the past have used a badge or tag IR transmission containing a serial number in the process of identifying a badge to the system. The length of the IR transmission is a significant determiner of battery life for the badges and a significant component of the length of the IR transmission is the serial number of the badge. Short serial numbers require reuse of serial numbers sooner resulting in possible duplication of badge identities within a facility causing a compromise in the integrity of the whole system. Longer serial numbers solve this problem but seriously reduce battery life. Therefore a design that can reduce the length of the IR packet without giving up a long serial number is invaluable for maximizing battery life.

An object of at least one embodiment of the present invention is to provide an improved real-time method and system for locating a mobile object or person in a tracking environment.

In carrying out the above object and other objects of at least one embodiment of the present invention, a real-time method of locating a mobile object or person in a tracking environment in which a plurality of sensors are located is provided. The method includes providing a tracking tag wearable by the person or attachable to the object. The method further includes modulating a first carrier signal with a first packet including a first set of data to obtain a modulated first signal. The method still further includes transmitting from the tag to a sensor nearest the tag the first signal. The first signal contains the first packet and has a first precision and a first range within the environment. The method further includes repeating the steps of modulating and transmitting until a modulated second signal is received at the tag from the nearest sensor within a time period after the step of transmitting. The second signal contains a second packet including a second set of data and has a second precision and a second range within the environment. The method still further includes receiving the second signal at the tag within the time period. The method further includes demodulating the second signal to obtain the second packet. The method still further includes determining location of the tag within the environment based on the second packet of the received demodulated second signal.

At least a portion of the second set of data may uniquely identify the nearest sensor.

The first set of data may either non-uniquely or uniquely identify the tag.

The first packet may be an IR packet and the second packet may be an RF packet.

The tracking environment may be a clinical environment.

The method may further include storing at least a portion of the second set of data in the tag to obtain stored data. The method may still further include modulating a third carrier signal with a third packet including the stored data to obtain a modulated third signal. The method may further include transmitting from the tag to a device other than the nearest sensor the third signal. The third signal has a third precision and a third range within the environment.

The tag may be a multi-modal tag.

The first precision may be greater than the second precision and the first range may be shorter than the second range.

The third packet may be an RF packet.

The first precision may be greater than the third precision and the first range may be shorter than the third range.

The first and second signals may be electromagnetic signals.

The first signal may be an IR signal and the second signal may be an RF signal.

The first signal may be a line-of-sight signal and the second signal may be a non-line-of-sight signal.

The first, second and third signals may be electromagnetic signals.

The first signal may be an IR signal and the second and third signals may be RF signals.

The first signal may be a line-of-sight signal and the second and third signals may be non-line-of-sight signals.

The method may further include validating the second packet prior to the step of determining.

The tag may be battery-operated.

Further in carrying out the above object and other objects of at least one embodiment of the present invention, a real-time system of locating a mobile object or person in a tracking environment is provided. The system includes a plurality of sensors located in the tracking environment. The system further includes a tracking tag wearable by the person or attachable to the object. The tag is programmed to at least partially perform the step of modulating a first carrier signal with a first packet including a first set of data to obtain a modulated first signal. The tag is further programmed to at least partially perform the step of transmitting to a sensor nearest the tag the first signal. The first signal contains the first packet and has a first precision and a first range within the environment. The tag is still further programmed to at least partially perform the step of repeating the steps of modulating and transmitting until a modulated second signal is received from the nearest sensor within a time period after the step of transmitting. The second signal contains a second packet including a second set of data and has a second precision and a second range within the environment. The tag is further programmed to at least partially perform the step of receiving the second signal within the time period. The tag is still further programmed to at least partially perform the step of demodulating the second signal to obtain the second packet. The tag is further programmed to at least partially perform the step of determining location of the tag within the environment based on the second packet of the received demodulated second signal.

The tag may be further programmed to at least partially perform the step of storing at least a portion of the second set of data in the tag to obtain stored data. The tag may be still further programmed to at least partially perform the step of modulating a third carrier signal with a third packet including the stored data to obtain a modulated third signal. The tag may be further programmed to at least partially perform the step of transmitting to a device other than the nearest sensor the third signal. The third signal has a third precision and a third range within the environment.

The tag may be further programmed to at least partially perform the step of validating the second packet prior to the step of determining.

The above object and other objects, features, and advantages of at least one embodiment of the present invention are readily apparent from the following detailed description of the best mode for carrying out the invention when taken in connection with the accompanying drawings.

FIG. 1A is a schematic overview diagram and key of a simplified sample facility or tracking environment and illustrating one embodiment of a method and system of the invention;

FIG. 1B is a diagram and key similar to the diagram and key of FIG. 1A but of an extended sample facility;

FIG. 2A is a diagram and key similar to the diagram and key of FIG. 1A and particularly illustrating signal flow to and from RF and IR elements or devices;

FIG. 2B is a diagram and key similar to the diagram and key of FIG. 1B and particularly illustrating signal flow to and from RF and IR elements or devices;

FIG. 3A is a communications timing diagram for the small facility system of FIGS. 1A and 2A;

FIG. 3B is a communications timing diagram for the extended system of FIGS. 1B and 2B;

FIG. 4 is a block diagram flow chart illustrating acquisition and validation of location ID with regard to a tag and a sensor;

FIG. 5A is a block diagram flow chart illustrating communications with a house system with respect to a tag and a gateway in a small facility;

FIG. 5B is a chart similar to the chart of FIG. 5A but with respect to a tag and a link in an extended facility;

FIG. 6 is a block diagram flow chart illustrating communications between a gateway and link(s);

FIG. 7 is a block diagram flow chart illustrating communications initiated by a tag switch event; and

FIG. 8 is a schematic block diagram illustrating a tag or badge constructed in accordance with at least one embodiment of the present invention.

As required, detailed embodiments of the present invention are disclosed herein; however, it is to be understood that the disclosed embodiments are merely exemplary of the invention that may be embodied in various and alternative forms. The figures are not necessarily to scale; some features may be exaggerated or minimized to show details of particular components. Therefore, specific structural and functional details disclosed herein are not to be interpreted as limiting, but merely as a representative basis for teaching one skilled in the art to variously employ the present invention.

In general, a method and system constructed in accordance with at least one embodiment of the present invention provides the ability to track staff, patients, or assets within a facility or tracking environment. This is accomplished through the use of badges or tags (used interchangeably herein) on the persons or objects needing to be tracked. To facilitate this, sensors (usually one per room and spaced out in hallways) and other communication links or repeaters are strategically located to provide communications to a gateway port (usually ethernet) into a house IT system (i.e. house data system). Infrared and RF are used between the badges and sensors for acquiring location information and RF is used exclusively by the badges back to the house IT system. Communication means other than IR and RF could also be used.

Referring now to the drawing figures, FIG. 1A illustrates a sample facility installation where the gateway can be located such that the tags and diagnostic communications of the sensors can be received directly by the gateway. Sensors (the IR receivers and RF transceivers) are located in areas where location information is desired. Link modules are not needed.

FIG. 1B illustrates a sample larger facility installation where link modules are used to extend the RF coverage. The gateway to the house data system is located so that the distances to the furthest devices are minimized. Sensors (the IR receivers and RF transceivers) are usually located one in each area to be identified. The link modules are placed in locations where they provide the necessary coverage to pick up tags and the relay the diagnostic signals of the sensors.

FIG. 2A illustrates the RF and IR components of the RTLS system for a smaller facility. They are shown identifying their IR and RF communications capabilities. Tags have IR transmit and bidirectional RF capability and can communicate with sensors and a gateway. Sensors have IR receive and bidirectional RF capability and can communicate with tags and a gateway. The gateway has bidirectional RF capability for communicating with tags and sensors along with a network interface which is typically ethernet to communicate with the house data system.

FIG. 2B illustrates the RF and IR components of the RTLS system for a larger facility and are shown identifying their IR and RF communications capabilities. Tags have IR transmit and bidirectional RF capability and can communicate with sensors and links. Link modules have bidirectional RF capability only and are capable of communicating with tags, sensors, and a gateway. Sensors typically have IR receive and bidirectional RF capability. The gateway has bidirectional RF capability for communicating with links along with a network interface which is typically ethernet to communicate with the house data system.

FIG. 3A illustrates, based on an event such as from a timer or switch closure, a tag which transmits a short IR packet consisting of a start bit and a few other bits to convey data such as mode and/or error checking Compared to previous architectures where the serial number of the tag was embedded this packet length results in a length reduction typically greater than 10 to 1. With current IR devices, the IR transmission length can be on the order of 4-8 milliseconds or less compared to systems where the data bits required to convey the serial number require a transmission length more on the order of 70-80 milliseconds or 10% or less of what was required with the serial number embedded. This has a number of important benefits:

In the small facility configuration, the tag acquires its location by sending a short IR message and receiving an RF transmission from a nearby sensor. If no response is received after a predetermined delay, the tag will retry. This process is continued on a predetermined schedule by a tag so that it is always up to date with the location ID (sensor serial number) that it is nearest.

On an independent schedule, the tag can pass on its location ID to a gateway to communicate to the house data system its current location. Previous designs required this to occur as part of the communication with the sensor. This architecture permits it to occur only as needed such as on location change which results in fewer RF transmissions reducing the likelihood of collisions and increasing battery life.

FIG. 3B illustrates in a larger facility where RF range may be a problem. Link modules may be employed to enable tags and sensors to communicate with the gateway at a much greater distance. The process of the tag in acquiring location information (nearest sensor's serial number) is the same as with a smaller system but the link modules enable communication at a greater distance by repeating the tag communications to and from the gateway.

The flow chart of FIG. 4 demonstrates the process by which the tag acquires and validates its location ID. The tag sends a short IR packet to the sensor(s). It expects an RF message back from the nearest sensor. A timeout is employed to prevent the tag from waiting an unreasonable amount of time and if no message is received the tag will, after a predetermined time delay, try again with another IR packet. When an RF packet from a sensor is received, the tag conditions its acceptance as a location by comparing with previous location IDs. If the same location ID is not received n times in a row, it will not accept the new location ID. This validation process is desirable because the possibility exists that two tags in adjacent areas might coincide time-wise in communicating with different sensors and the sensor RF message that a tag receives could be from a sensor in a nearby area and not the one it sent its IR packet to. The validation process consists of receiving a location ID from a sensor and doing this several times with varied programmable delays so that no two tags would be communicating successively with the same sensor to make it through the validation process.

If a tag fails to communicate or validate with any sensor within a predetermined number of attempts, the location ID will be set to a value such as zero to designate that no validated location information has been received by the tag.

The validation process is the same whether or not link modules are used to extend communication with the gateway.

FIG. 5A illustrates that in a smaller facility at predetermined time intervals the tag transmits an RF packet to the gateway. It looks for a return gateway RF packet and if not received within a predetermined amount of time it delays and retries the process. When it receives a gateway packet, it extracts its message or acknowledgment and acts on the message or goes to sleep if acknowledged.

FIG. 5B illustrates that, similar to the smaller facility in a larger system, link modules are used to extend the range. In this case, the tag transmits an RF packet to a link module. The link module passes this on to the gateway and receives a return message. The tag waits for an acknowledgment or message and retries with the link module if it does not receive one. It acts on the message or goes to sleep if acknowledged.

FIG. 6 illustrates that, for extended range systems, the gateways and tags communicate by going through link modules which receive the tag messages and pass them on to the gateway and receive the gateway messages and pass them on to the tags.

FIG. 7 illustrates that if a switch on the tag is closed or certain other events happen on the tag, the tag will, after a predetermined delay, send a message to a link(s) or in the case of a smaller facility (no links) directly to a gateway. It will then wait for a return message or acknowledgment. If the exchange is not successful, it will retry after a predetermined delay until successful.

FIG. 8 illustrates a block diagram showing the major elements of a tag. The “brains” of the tag is a microprocessor which composes and sends the IR transmit packets and composes, sends and receives the RF packets. It also interacts with a motion detector (to reduce tag functionality during inactivity for battery conservation and reduced IR/RF traffic), switch(es), an RF transceiver, an IR transmitter, displays messages on an LED or LCD, and provides power management.

The following is a description of the approach that allows for minimizing the badge IR packet length while supporting long serial numbers.

This approach has a number of strengths:

1. Badge IR transmissions can be very short and only single sensor RF transmissions are needed for the badge to learn its location.

2. The identification process is robust in that any badge change in location should go through a validation process.

3. The badge communication only needs to be a single one-way IR transmission to the sensor.

4. Sensor communication only needs to be a one-way RF transmission to the badge.

5. Communication timing between the badge and sensor is not critical other than that it should occur within a reasonable time to not affect battery life.

6. Latency between the badge and house system is optimal since the sensor is not a part of that process.

7. Call functions from the badge and messaging to the badge, as well as prioritization of communications to and from the badge, do not involve the sensor and can be optimized independently.

8. The amount of activity on the part of the sensor is minimal resulting in less sensor current drain making its operation on battery power practical.

9. The fact that the sensor may have bidirectional RF capability allows diagnostic and supervisory functions between the system and sensors independent of the badges.

There are a number of events that can be used to cause a badge to perform an infrared transmission to provide an update of a badge or tag location, some of which are:

a specific (and programmable) timer function with the badge;

a user event such as a button press;

a specific biometric input to the badge;

an external trigger input; and

as commanded by the link.

At least one embodiment of the present invention provides one or more of the following features:

Collisions

The short IR packet, besides helping with battery life on the packet itself, also helps with minimizing collisions in two additional ways: one, because of the reduced packet length; and second, the frequency of occurrence of the IR packets can be reduced since the badges are aware of when they have successfully communicated with a sensor. In a one-way system where a badge never knows if it has been heard by a sensor, it therefore has to transmit on a more frequent basis. Being able to optimize the fire rate based on success helps both on collisions and also on battery life independent of the packet length factor.

Validation

This is provided to prevent misinterpretation of a location because of RF transmissions crisscrossing in a common area shared by two sensors when two badges in nearby areas happen to run in sync. In the architecture one may choose to validate two or more times (up to some limit such as five) before one accepts a new location. One can also accelerate the rate of retries during a validation sequence to reduce the impact of the retries on latency so the validation of location does not have to exact a toll on latency.

Communication

The badges are aware when they fail to communicate with a sensor for some period of time and can convey that information (the fact that they have not communicated with a sensor) to a link and gateway to the house data system.

Diagnostics

Because of the two-way RF communication capabilities that the sensors may possess, they can communicate with links on a periodic basis for diagnostic purposes to identify system problems at an early stage and improve system reliability.

While exemplary embodiments are described above, it is not intended that these embodiments describe all possible forms of the invention. Rather, the words used in the specification are words of description rather than limitation, and it is understood that various changes may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Additionally, the features of various implementing embodiments may be combined to form further embodiments of the invention.

Buehler, William S., Derks, Harry G., Hall, Michael B.

Patent Priority Assignee Title
10070805, Mar 13 2017 General Electric Company Patient monitoring system and method having location-specific contextual alarming
10290371, Jan 30 2018 General Electric Company System of medical devices and method of controlling the same
10304304, Mar 02 2015 Enovate Medical, LLC Asset management using an asset tag device
10311696, Apr 26 2017 General Electric Company Patient monitoring method and system providing incident grouping of alarm events
10360421, Mar 02 2015 Enovate Medical, LLC Asset management using an asset tag device
10535244, Mar 13 2017 General Electric Company Patient monitoring system and method for activity tracking
10949633, Mar 02 2015 Enovate Medical, LLC Asset management using an asset tag device
11011267, Sep 18 2013 Hill-Rom Services, Inc. Bed/room/patient association systems and methods
11842812, Jun 27 2019 GE Precision Healthcare LLC Location-based user authorization for an infant care device
11911325, Feb 26 2019 Hill-Rom Services, Inc Bed interface for manual location
9830424, Sep 18 2013 Hill-Rom Services, Inc Bed/room/patient association systems and methods
Patent Priority Assignee Title
4048729, Mar 11 1976 Fleetwood Furniture Company Electrical teaching system
4392132, Jun 15 1981 Fleetwood Furniture Company Wireless signaling system
4868859, Jun 12 1987 VERSUS TECHNOLOGY, INC Supervised, interactive alarm reporting system
4906853, Mar 17 1988 UNITED IDENTIFICATION SYSTEMS CORPORATION; VERSUS TECHNOLOGY, INC Apparatus and method for varying the timing of a control signal
5017794, Mar 17 1988 UNITED IDENTIFICATION SYSTEMS CORPORATION; VERSUS TECHNOLOGY, INC Apparatus and method for varying the timing of a control signal
5027314, Mar 17 1988 UNITED IDENTIFICATION SYSTEMS CORPORATION; VERSUS TECHNOLOGY, INC Apparatus and method for position reporting
5027383, Jun 12 1987 VERSUS TECHNOLOGY, INC Supervised, interactive alarm reporting system
5093786, Jan 27 1989 Fleetwood Furniture Company, Inc.; FLEETWOOD FURNITURE COMPANY, A MI CORP Remote response system
5119104, May 04 1990 FRESHLOC TECHNOLOGIES, INC Location system adapted for use in multipath environments
5131019, Jun 12 1987 Versus Technology, Inc. System for interfacing an alarm reporting device with a cellular radio transceiver
5276496, Oct 30 1992 FRESHLOC TECHNOLOGIES, INC Optical receiver for area location system
5355222, May 15 1992 FRESHLOC TECHNOLOGIES, INC Optical receiver for area location system
5379213, Jan 28 1992 Fleetwood Furniture Company, Inc. Test scoring system and method
5387993, Jun 25 1993 FRESHLOC TECHNOLOGIES, INC Method for receiving and transmitting optical data and control information to and from remotely located receivers and transmitters in an optical locator system
5548637, Sep 09 1993 REMOTE LOCATOR SYSTEMS, LLC Method and apparatus for locating personnel and objects in response to telephone inquiries
5572195, Aug 01 1994 FRESHLOC TECHNOLOGIES, INC Sensory and control system for local area networks
5724357, Jan 28 1992 FLEETWOOD FURNITURE COMPANY, INC Remote response system and data transfer protocol
5883582, Feb 07 1997 CHECKPOINT SYSTEMS, INC ; Mitsubishi Material Corporation Anticollision protocol for reading multiple RFID tags
5917425, Jan 22 1996 CENTRAK, INC IR/RF locator
5929777, May 16 1996 Verizon Patent and Licensing Inc Radio activated personal infrared distress beacon
5929779, May 31 1996 THE CHASE MANHATTAN BANK, AS COLLATERAL AGENT Read/write protocol for radio frequency identification tags
6021119, Jun 24 1994 FLEETWOOD GROUP, INC Multiple site interactive response system
6069557, Jul 20 1998 MOUNTAIN LIGHT TECHNOLOGY, LLC Automatic long-life infrared emitter & locator system
6104295, Jul 20 1998 Versus Technology, Inc. Electronic band tag and method of storing ID information therein
6154139, Apr 21 1998 VERSUS TECHNOLOGY, INC Method and system for locating subjects within a tracking environment
6211781, May 24 1999 United States Postal Service Method and apparatus for tracking and locating a moveable article
6241364, Nov 23 1999 Xerox Corporation Light fixture embedded infrared beacon
6462656, Nov 03 1997 Hill-Rom Services, Inc. Personnel and asset tracking method and apparatus
6577877, Feb 23 2000 Google Technology Holdings LLC Wireless infrared peripheral interface for a communication device
6665000, Nov 13 1998 Fleetwood Group, Inc. Remote site interactive system
6788199, Mar 12 2001 Eureka Technology Partners, LLC Article locator system
6838992, Mar 21 2003 Versus Technology, Inc. Methods and systems for locating subjects and providing event notification within a tracking environment and badge for use therein
7005965, Feb 14 2003 Winbond Electronics Corporation Radio frequency identification device
7042337, Nov 07 1997 Hill-Rom Services, Inc. Communication and data entry device
7079009, Oct 27 1999 Checkpoint Systems, Inc.; Microchip Technology Incorporated Anticollision protocol with fast read request and additional schemes for reading multiple transponders in an RFID system
7277671, Feb 14 2002 Fleetwood Group, Inc.; FLEETWOOD GROUP, INC Wireless response system and method
7389180, Feb 06 2004 Electronic tracking and ranging system
7403111, Oct 20 2003 CONSORTIUM P, INC Location system using a first signal to gate a second signal
7599703, May 12 2003 Fleetwood Group, Inc.; FLEETWOOD GROUP, INC Wireless polling system using spread-spectrum communication
7746820, Oct 04 2004 Fleetwood Group, Inc. Response system and method with dynamic personality assignment
7747261, Aug 18 2005 FLEETWOOD GROUP, INC Asynchronous response system with acknowledge
20020198986,
20040034581,
20080094211,
20080218351,
20090121867,
////////
Executed onAssignorAssigneeConveyanceFrameReelDoc
Jul 28 2010Versus Technology, Inc.(assignment on the face of the patent)
Jul 28 2010Fleetwood Group, Inc.(assignment on the face of the patent)
Aug 27 2010DERKS, HARRY G , MR VERSUS TECHNOLOGY, INC ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS 0249250126 pdf
Aug 27 2010BUEHLER, WILLIAM S , MR VERSUS TECHNOLOGY, INC ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS 0249250126 pdf
Aug 27 2010HALL, ANN ELIZABETH, MS VERSUS TECHNOLOGY, INC ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS 0249250126 pdf
Aug 27 2010DERKS, HARRY G , MR FLEETWOOD GROUP, INC ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS 0249250126 pdf
Aug 27 2010BUEHLER, WILLIAM S , MR FLEETWOOD GROUP, INC ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS 0249250126 pdf
Aug 27 2010HALL, ANN ELIZABETH, MS FLEETWOOD GROUP, INC ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS 0249250126 pdf
Date Maintenance Fee Events
Aug 24 2016ASPN: Payor Number Assigned.
Jan 06 2017LTOS: Pat Holder Claims Small Entity Status.
Feb 20 2017M2551: Payment of Maintenance Fee, 4th Yr, Small Entity.
Feb 22 2021M2552: Payment of Maintenance Fee, 8th Yr, Small Entity.


Date Maintenance Schedule
Aug 20 20164 years fee payment window open
Feb 20 20176 months grace period start (w surcharge)
Aug 20 2017patent expiry (for year 4)
Aug 20 20192 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 4)
Aug 20 20208 years fee payment window open
Feb 20 20216 months grace period start (w surcharge)
Aug 20 2021patent expiry (for year 8)
Aug 20 20232 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 8)
Aug 20 202412 years fee payment window open
Feb 20 20256 months grace period start (w surcharge)
Aug 20 2025patent expiry (for year 12)
Aug 20 20272 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 12)